The Microsoft Azure Storage SDK for .NET allows you to build Azure applications that take advantage of scalable cloud computing resources.
This repository contains the open source subset of the .NET SDK. For documentation of the complete Azure SDK, please see the Microsoft Azure .NET Developer Center.
- Tables
- Create/Delete Tables
- Query/Create/Read/Update/Delete Entities
- Blobs
- Create/Read/Update/Delete Blobs
- Files
- Create/Update/Delete Directories
- Create/Read/Update/Delete Files
- Queues
- Create/Delete Queues
- Insert/Peek Queue Messages
- Advanced Queue Operations
The complete Microsoft Azure SDK can be downloaded from the Microsoft Azure Downloads Page and ships with support for building deployment packages, integrating with tooling, rich command line tooling, and more.
For the best development experience, developers should use the official Microsoft NuGet packages for libraries. NuGet packages are regularly updated with new functionality and hotfixes.
- .NET Framework 4.0: As of October 2012, Storage Client Libraries for .NET supports primarily the desktop .NET Framework 4 release and above.
- Windows 8 and 8.1 for Windows Store app development: Storage Client Libraries are available for Windows Store applications.
- Windows Phone 8 and 8.1 app development: Storage Client Libraries are available for Windows Phone applications including Universal applications.
- Microsoft Azure Subscription: To call Microsoft Azure services, you need to first create an account. Sign up for a free trial or use your MSDN subscriber benefits.
- Hosting: To host your .NET code in Microsoft Azure, you additionally need to download the full Microsoft Azure SDK for .NET - which includes packaging, emulation, and deployment tools, or use Microsoft Azure Web Sites to deploy ASP.NET web applications.
The Storage Client Library ships with the Microsoft Azure SDK for .NET and also on NuGet. You'll find the latest version and hotfixes on NuGet via the WindowsAzure.Storage
package.
This version of the Storage Client Library ships with the new storage version 2014-02-14. This storage version provides a preview of the Microsoft Azure File Service. For more details, please see the [Introducing Microsoft Azure File Service blog on MSDN] (http://blogs.msdn.com/b/windowsazurestorage/archive/2014/05/11/introducing-microsoft-azure-file-service.aspx).
To get the source code of the SDK via git just type:
git clone git://github.com/Azure/azure-storage-net.git
cd azure-storage-net
To get the binaries of this library as distributed by Microsoft, ready for use within your project you can also have them installed by the .NET package manager NuGet.
Install-Package WindowsAzure.Storage
This version depends on three libraries (collectively referred to as ODataLib), which are resolved through the ODataLib (version 5.6.2) packages available through NuGet and not the WCF Data Services installer which currently contains 5.0.0 versions.
The ODataLib libraries can be downloaded directly or referenced by your code project through NuGet.
The specific ODataLib packages are:
The desktop and phone libraries depend on Newtonsoft Json, which can be downloaded directly or referenced by your code project through Nuget.
- [Newtonsoft.Json] (http://www.nuget.org/packages/Newtonsoft.Json)
The desktop library depends on WCF Data Services Client, which can be downloaded directly or referenced by your code project through Nuget.
- [Microsoft.Data.Services.Client] (http://www.nuget.org/packages/Microsoft.Data.Services.Client/)
FiddlerCore is required by:
- Test\FaultInjection\HttpMangler
- Test\FaultInjection\AzureStoreMangler
- Test\WindowsDesktop
This dependency is not included and must be downloaded from http://www.fiddler2.com/Fiddler/Core/.
Once installed:
- Copy
FiddlerCore.dll
\azure-storage-net\Test\FaultInjection\Dependencies\DotNet2
- Copy
FiddlerCore4.dll
toazure-storage-net\Test\FaultInjection\Dependencies\DotNet4
Note: How-Tos focused around accomplishing specific tasks are available on the [http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/develop/net/](Microsoft Azure .NET Developer Center).
First, include the classes you need (in this case we'll include the Storage and Table and further demonstrate creating a table):
using Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage;
using Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Storage.Table;
To perform an operation on any Microsoft Azure resource you will first instantiate a client which allows performing actions on it. The resource is known as an entity. To do so for Table you also have to authenticate your request:
var storageAccount = CloudStorageAccount.Parse(
CloudConfigurationManager.GetSetting("StorageConnectionString"));
var tableClient = storageAccount.CreateCloudTableClient();
Now, to create a table entity using the client:
CloudTable peopleTable = tableClient.GetTableReference("people");
peopleTable.Create();
Be sure to check out the Microsoft Azure Developer Forums on MSDN if you have trouble with the provided code or use StackOverflow.
We gladly accept community contributions.
- Issues: Please report bugs using the Issues section of GitHub
- Forums: Interact with the development teams on StackOverflow or the Microsoft Azure Forums
- Source Code Contributions: Please follow the contribution guidelines for Microsoft Azure open source that details information on onboarding as a contributor
For general suggestions about Microsoft Azure please use our UserVoice forum.